O.
- Oboe, lieutenant, his examination before the privy council, [202].
- Osten, von der, his treacherous proposals for arresting Struensee, [49];
- his betrayal of the plan, [50];
- persuades the queen to submission when arrested, [115], [116];
- his principal talent, espionage, [146];
- appointed minister for foreign affairs, [156];
- his intriguing conduct, [166].
P.
- Palace guard, the, [53], [76].
- Pamphleteers, restrictions on, [58].
- Peter III. of Russia, his overthrow, [90].
- Philosophical hero, the, [189].
- Press, freedom of the, [50];
- restrictions on the, [59].
- Prince Royal, education of the, [313], [262].
- Privy Council of State, established, [152], [153];
- the members, [153], [156];
- Struensee's examination before the, [178] et seq.;
- Brandt's examination, [184];
- examination of the different prisoners, [201], [202].
- Public opinion, Struensee's indifference to, [357].
Q.
- Queen Dowager. (See Juliana Maria.)
- Queen's bouquet, Struensee's sale of the, [292].
R.
- Rantzau-Ascheberg, count, remonstrates with Struensee, [81];
- joins in a conspiracy against him, [84]-[102];
- his position and character, [88];
- his vacillation, [99];
- his intention to betray the conspiracy, [100];
- pretends a fit of the gout, ib.;
- surprises the king in bed, [103];
- undertakes the arrest of the queen,
- Caroline Matilda, [113];
- the resistance he meets with, [114], [115];
- his promotions, [125];
- appointed minister for the army, [156];
- his opposition to Count Bernstorff, [345].
- Reverdil, his character as an honest man, [50];
- his political honesty, [83];
- insult to, [96];
- his arrest, [144];
- his interview with the queen dowager, [145];
- leaves Copenhagen, and enters the service of the Helvetic republic, where he remains until his death, [146];
- his visit to London, and his statement respecting the Danish envoy, [168];
- his remark on Brandt, [182], note;
- his appeal to the king in Caroline Matilda's favour, [251];
- his defence of Struensee, [319].
- Römeling, admiral, appointed minister for the army, [156].
- Rönpstorff, major von, arrests the town commandant and Justiz-rath Struensee, [112];
- his reward, [126].
- Royal family of England, their successive mortifications, [162].
- Rumohr, Herr von, [11].
S.
- Sailors, Norwegian, their threatening demonstration, [9];
- obtain redress, [10];
- sent on furlough, [56].
- Sames, colonel von, [66];
- arrests Count Brandt, [109];
- his rewards, [126].
- Schack, von, the king's page, [59]-[66];
- appointed reporter for the treasury, [156];
- selected to lay before the queen Struensee's confession, which she precipitately signs, [209], [211].
- Schimmelmann, Frau von, [97].
- Schimmelmann, baron, tirade against, [163].
- Schiötte, Frau, evidence of, on the queen's trial, [240].
- Schlemann, lieutenant, [98].
- Schulin, count, his house and library destroyed by the mob, [121], [122].
- Silk weavers of Copenhagen, their complaints, [11].
- Sorgenfrie police, [55].
- Sprengtporten, baron von, the Swedish envoy, [80].
- Staffeldt, privy councillor von, dismissed, [52], [53].
- State prisoners, examination of, before the privy council of state, [178]-[202].
- Struensee, Adam, his fatherly letter to his son, [194].
- Struensee, Count Frederick, conspiracy for effecting his overthrow, [7], [14];
- his weakness, [10];
- Falckenskjold's advice to, [13], [14];
- Brandt's letter of complaint to, [27];
- his letter to Brandt, a long state paper of the doctrinaire school, [34]-[47];
- Brandt's treacherous proposals for arresting him, [47], [49];
- anonymous attacks on, [50];
- his indifference to popular clamour, [51];
- dismisses several officials of high standing, [52];
- adopts measures of security, [54] et seq.;
- his disbandment of the horse and foot guards, [69];
- his intentions defeated, [78];
- his political blindness and obstinacy, [80], [81];
- all parties leagued against him, [82];
- conspiracy organised for his overthrow, [84] et seq.;
- orders for his arrest, [105];
- arrested, [107];
- his miserable cell, [108];
- bitter pamphlets published against, [132], [135], [136];
- persecution and arrests of his adherents, [141] et seq.;
- cruelly treated in prison, [149];
- his despair, [150];
- his examination before the privy council of state, [178] et seq.;
- his firmness, [179];
- his confession, [180];
- his base conduct, [181];
- his dishonourable disclosures, [182];
- his lame defence, [183];
- his habits in prison, [184];
- his friends, [193];
- the Rev. Dr. Münter's visit to, and their theologico-philosophical conversations, [187] et seq.;
- a fatherly letter to, [194];
- his conversion, [198], [200];
- effects of Christianity on, [199];
- the Fiscal General's indictment of, [256];
- recapitulation of Struensee's life, character, and alleged crimes, [258]-[294];
- his "inhuman" impudence, [275];
- his treatment of the crown prince, [279];
- his abolition of the council of state, [282];
- his disbandment of the guards, [287];
- his malversation of the finances, [289];
- an accomplice in selling her Majesty's costly bouquet, [292];
- the manner in which evidence was raked up against the unfortunate ex-minister, [295];
- defended by the lawyer Uldall, [298]-[316];
- Reverdil's defence of, [319];
- his written defence and apology, [329];
- his auto-biographical notices, [330] et seq.;
- his position and influence at court, [337]-[340];
- his charge of the different departments of state, [347] et seq.;
- his cabinet orders, [355];
- his indifference to public opinion, [357];
- a friend to the liberty of the subject, [361].
- Struensee, Justiz-rath, arrested, [112];
- his treatment in prison, [151];
- his examination before the privy council, [201];
- eventually becomes the Prussian minister of finances, [141].
- Struensee, lieutenant, banished the kingdom, [141];
- receives an appointment in Prussia through the interest of his brother, ib.
- Sturtz, councillor of legation, arrested, [112], [148].
- Suhm, von, the historian, drives the dowager queen into a conspiracy, [85];
- his bitterness against Struensee and the fallen ministry, [131], [132];
- his fulsome panegyric on the queen dowager and her son, [132];
- his warning appeal to the king, [133];
- issues a violent pamphlet, [134].